PublicWire | Emerging Market Stock News
  •  Home
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Energy
  • Cannabis
  • Finance
  • Retail
  • General
  • Podcast
  • Videos
  • Services
  •  Home
  • Technology
  • Medical
  • Energy
  • Cannabis
  • Finance
  • Retail
  • General
  • Podcast
  • Videos
  • Services
No Result
View All Result
PublicWire
No Result
View All Result

Home » Finance » Shell: record profit makes life no easier for oil producer

Shell: record profit makes life no easier for oil producer

by PublicWire
May 5, 2022
in Finance
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0

It was a week of firsts for Shell. A new chief financial officer, Sinead Gorman, presented her first set of hard numbers in its first-quarter results on Thursday. Those, too, set a precedent. The Anglo-Dutch oil company boasted its best-ever ebitda result in that period, and the top quarterly out-turn since June 2008.

She must help her boss Ben van Beurden perform a tricky balancing act. Shareholders hunger for payouts while some politicians hope to divert surfeit cash flow towards other perceived societal priorities.

Certainly, Shell gushes profit from every unit, including its downstream products division, which included a strong trading result. This business’s $2bn of ebitda gets credit for the group’s pleasant earnings surprise.

Adjust its earnings for various write-offs, including those for its abandoned Russian operations, and the oil major had returns on average capital employed of more than 10 per cent, well above its cost of capital. All this for 3.4 times (including net debt) its estimated ebitda.

BP, too, had excellent quarterly results this week. And so, some in Westminster howl for windfall taxes. Lex generally opposes these as investment hindrances. But arguing that any such tax would curb production of oil and gas makes it sound like a carbon tax.

That is not so far from the oil producer’s thinking process. Shell already weighs down any prospective project’s internal rate of return with carbon costs. It may well have its own global internal estimate, but says it varies by country. That must be rising if Europe’s emissions trading system is anything to go by. Its carbon price topped €91 per tonne this week, up 82 per cent over 12 months. The new UK contract trades at a similar value.

Just tipping its overflowing free cash flow coffers into the pockets of Shell shareholders via increased buybacks is hard for UK ministers to defend. A hint of better than expected payouts later in the year helped boost the share price 4 per cent on the day, first among its peers. Yet a Janus-like approach by US and European governments to the energy sector — harangued over both climate change and supply shortfalls — only encourages inertia.

Eventually, worries about economic recession should temper commodity prices and any fury over Big Oil’s profits. No wonder investors are greedy for all they can get this year.


This post was originally published on this site

Previous Post

The Hazards Of Investing In Oil: Part 3

Next Post

US stocks and bonds drop as traders weigh future direction of monetary policy

PublicWire

At PublicWire, we know the vast majority of all investors conduct their due diligence and get their news online in a variety of ways including email, social media, financial websites, text messages, RSS feeds and audio/video podcasts. PublicWire’s financial communications program is uniquely positioned to reach these investors throughout the U.S. and Canada as well as on a global scale.

Related Posts

Finance

South Korea ‘reviewing various plans’ to stabilise the won

September 15, 2022
0
Finance

European shares edge higher as investors weigh up policy outlook

September 15, 2022
0
Finance

Ethereum ‘Merge’ concludes in key moment for crypto market

September 15, 2022
0
Finance

EU embargo to hit Russian oil output, IEA says

September 14, 2022
0
Finance

European stocks slide after sharp Wall Street sell-off overnight

September 14, 2022
0
Finance

Terry Smith to close emerging markets investment trust

September 14, 2022
0
Next Post

US stocks and bonds drop as traders weigh future direction of monetary policy

Please login to join discussion

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Loading
Ad
PublicWire | Emerging Market Stock News 24/7 | Investor Relations US Stock Market

© Copyright 2022 publicwire.com

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Watch LIVE
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Services
  • Contributors

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • LIVE Investor News Channel
  • Cannabis
  • Energy
  • Finance
  • General
  • Medical
  • Podcasts
  • Retail
  • Technology
  • Videos

© Copyright 2022 publicwire.com

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.